Joanna Bryson, lecteur à l'Université de Bath, parle de "Le rôle des personnes à l'âge de l'AI', sur le stade de la technologie, au New Scientist Live 2019
4771 x 3744 px | 40,4 x 31,7 cm | 15,9 x 12,5 inches | 300dpi
Date de la prise de vue:
13 octobre 2019
Lieu:
ExCel London, One Western Gateway, Royal Victoria Dock,
Informations supplémentaires:
Cette image peut avoir des imperfections car il s’agit d’une image historique ou de reportage.
Artificial intelligence (AI) and the information age are bringing us more information about ourselves and each other than any society has ever known. Yet at the same time it brings machines seemingly more capable of every human endeavour than any human can be. What are the limits of AI? Of intelligence and humanity more broadly? What are our ethical obligations to machines? Do these alter our obligations to each other? What is the basis of our social obligations? Joanna Bryson is an associate professor at the University of Bath. She has degrees in psychology and artificial intelligence, so she approaches AI from the perspective and for the purpose of understanding human behaviour. Before her postgraduate education she did programming and system administration in Chicago's financial industry, and has since consulted for a number of companies on AI, notably LEGO. Bryson has worked off and on in AI ethics since 1996, and helped author the UK research councils’ principles of robotics in 2010. In the last two years she’s consulted to the Swiss National Science Foundation and the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research on researching the impact of AI on society, the Red Cross on autonomous weapons, Chatham House on the impact of AI on the nuclear threat, and the British Parliament, the British Financial Conduct Authority, the European Parliament and Commission, the Council of Europe, and the OECD regarding the regulation of AI.